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Tuesday, 8 April 2014

CONFUSION OVER EDITOR’S ‘RE-ARREST’

There was widespread confusion in Swaziland on Tuesday (8
April 2014) regarding the status of Nation
magazine editor Bheki Makhubu and human rights lawyer Thulani Maseko.

Both men were released
from jail by the Swazi High Court on Sunday after spending 20 days on
remand awaiting trial on contempt of court charges, following the publication of
articles critical of Chief Justice Michael Ramodibedi.

But, reports were circulating in Swaziland that new arrest
warrants had been issued against the two men, but that police officers were
reluctant to execute them without the express command of the Swazi Police
Commissioner Isaac Magagula.

At the centre of the case is Chief Justice Ramodibedi, who on
17 March issued warrants for the arrest of Makhubu and Maseko and then sent them to jail on remand. He did this in
closed court without lawyers present.

In her
written judgement, Dlamini said that CJ Ramodibedi had
sent the men to jail without hearing arguments or submissions why they should
not be.

She added that the law in Swaziland stated that it
was a magistrate’s job to issue arrest warrants.

She said the affidavits used to support the warrant
of arrest were ‘incompetent in law’ because they were raised by the Chief
Justice’s clerk, who was representing the Chief Justice. The Chief Justice claimed
to be injured by the contents of the articles the two accused men wrote.

Judge Dlamini said, ‘A person attesting an affidavit must becompletely objective and have no interest of any kind
in the contents or input of thataffidavit.’

She went on to say that the hearing should not have been heard in
the Chief Justice’s chambers.

‘A matter of such magnitude viz.
incarceration of persons ought tohave been deliberated
fully in an open court.’

Meanwhile,
the Swazi Observer newspaper has
reported that the Chief Justice is angry that Makhubu and Maseko were freed
from jail after the High Court ruling. It reported that Judge Dlamini had not
specifically stated the two men should be freed and no release warrant had been
signed.

It reported
that on Monday Ramodibedi summoned to his chambers Superintendent Joseph Mahlindza, the Officer-in Charge at Sidwashini Correctional
Services, where the two had been jailed, together with two officers. They had
to answer to him why the two prisoners had been released without a liberation
warrant.

Under normal
circumstances, the liberation warrant is signed by the Registrar of the High
Court, the Observer reported.